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Page
Six
PENN
YAN
THURSDAY,
O
C
T
O
B
E
R
18,
1923
'
1
1
...........................................
.....
■■
■
«
Cortlandts
Washington
|
Square
\At
nine
o’clock
a
report
reached
the
hospital
that
General
Reynolds
had
arrived
in
Gettysburg
in
advance
of
the
first
corps,
and
that
he
had
mount­
ed
a
fresh
horse
and
galloped
out
past
the
seminary
to
the
front.
Some
sol­
diers
reported
they
had
seen
him,
sur­
rounded
by
a
half-dozen
aides.
The
hospital
corps
felt
the
stimulus
of
this
good
news
at
once;
even
Ann
was
cer­
tain
that
the
horrid
tide
of
wounded
invisible
enemy.
“What
in
G-—d’s
name
are
you
here
for?”
■*
“You
are
not
dead!”
Ann
repeated
stupidly,
and
added,
with
a
flash
of
joyous
self-revelation,
“I'm
glad!”
Self-respect
came
back
to
her,
and
clothed
her
gloriously.
“You
can’t
stay
here,”
Hendricks
was
shouting.
He
whirled
her
back
.%
would
ebb
with
the
arrival
of
the
pop­
ular
Union
leader.
She
was
engaged
In
cutting
the
uniforms
from
horribly
mangled
men;
the
regular
nurses
were
unable
to
cope
with
the
wound­
ed,
and
she
was
welcome
to
do
what
she
could.
lender
a
portico.
“It’s
no
place
for
a
young
lady—
can’t
you
see
that?
Why
didn’t
you
stay
in
New
York?
Why
don’t
you
stay
with
the
Sanitary
commission?
Why
do
you
have
to
fol­
low
me?”
/
“I’m
all
right,”
Ann
protested
un­
convincingly,
“now
that
I’ve
seen
you.”
«<
Janet
A.
Fairbank
8
Copyright
by
Ths
Bobtw-MerrW
Go.
All
around
the
seminary
the
battle
raged,
but
Ann
had
no
time
to
won-
CHAPTER
XII
Gettysburg.
Ann
found
shelter
in
a
little
house
on
Chambersburg
street:
she
felt
sure
that
it
must
be
respectable
because
it
stood
next
door
to
a
righteous-appear­
ing
Lutheran
church,
and
she
liked
the
look
of
the
place
besides.
She
liked
its
hostess
also.
She
had
found
her
trimming
geraniums
with
an
extraor­
dinary
placidity,
In
view
of
the
fact
that
there
were
said
to
be
enemy
sol­
diers
in
Gettysburg.
She
took
Ann
into
her
stuffy
little
house
and
brought
her
cold
water
from
the
pump
in
the
back
yard.
When
the
girl
had
washed
away
the
dust
of
her
journey,
the
two
settled
down
in
the
stifling
parlor
to
talk,
and
to
watch
from
behind
the
Nottingham
curtains
for
a
glimpse
pf
Confederate
soldiers.
The
little
town
remained
ominously
silent.
A
little
boy
came
running
down
the
street
shouting,
and
as
he
came
near
they
could
hear
that
he
was
calling:
“The
Johnnies
are
coming!”
Ann
ran
out
into
the
front
yard
to
question
him.
“There’s
>
»
a
whole
brigade
with
wagons;
they’re
after
clothing
and
shoes.
That’s
all
I
know!
Lemme
go
on!”
Suddenly
into
the
stillness
of
the
house
broke
clamorous
sounds—
shouts
and
the
thunder
of
horses’
feet.
“That’s
from
the
Emmitsburg
pike,
it
must
be
our
men!
-‘It’s
Buford’s
cavalry—It
must
be!”
They
opened
the
door
and
the
noise
came
louder.
It
was
infinitely
reassur­
ing.
As
they
watched,
the
end
of
the
street
was
filled
with
a
great
cloud
of
dust,
and
suddenly
a
front
rank
of
cavalry
broke
through
it,
and
bulked
huge
and
black
against
it.
In
five
minutes
they
were
gone;
in
half
an
hour
they
came
loafing
back,
gay
with
triumph.
“We
drove
’em
out
all
right!”
a
blond
Swede
from
Illinois
told
Ann,
as
he
stopped
to
drink
the
water
she
of­
fered
him.
“Where
are
you
going
now?”
“We
are
ordered
to
camp
on
the
ridge
by
the
seminary
on
the
other
side
of
town,
but
we
are
placing
vedettes
on
all
the
roads.
They
say
General
Reynolds
has
been
ordered
to
occupy
the
town:
looks
as
if
this
is
the
place
all
right.
It’s
a
pity
you
ladies
aren’t
safe
away.”
“I
can
nurse,”
she
All
right?”
he
echoed.
He
took
off
his
cap
and
flung
it
violently
on
the
ground.
“You've
got
to
get
away!
You’ve
got
to
make
the
Baltimore
pike,
whfere
our
people
are
coming
up.
I
can’t
go
with
you!
I
can’t
leave
here!”
Ann
looked
at
him
attentive­
ly;
his
face
had
hardened
into
sterner
lines,
and
his
mouth
was
firm
set.
She
was
extraordinarily
proud
of
him;
looking
at
him,
she
was
animated
by
a
sensation
of
the
sweetest
affection—
’the
most
soft
sisterliness.
Some
one
came
up
to
them
in
the
momentary
isolation
of
their
inter­
view,
and
Ann
turned
to
see
a
slim
young
man,
whose
trim
figure,
in
the
midst
of
the
battle
grime,
gave
her
a
swift
impression
of
elegance.
He
saluted
Hendricks,
and
said,
“Is
there
anything
I
can
do?
Your
wife—
it
would
give
me
pleasure
to
conduct
her
to
the
rear.”
His
English
was
tinged
with
a
faint
alien
accent,
Ana
thought.
Hendricks
tt
All
Around
the
Seminary
the
Battle
Raged.
der
where
the
victory
lay.
She
was
not
certain
which
army
had
possession
of
the
town,
but
she
knew
that
the
ground'
in
the
front
and
about
the
seminary
building
was
held
by
Union
troops.
There
was
great
activity
among
them,
and
off
to
the
right
a
constant
deafening
sound
of
artillery.
The
nearer
guns
had
been
placed
in
a
grove;
only
the
smoke
from
them
oozing
through
the
tree-tops,
white
and
thin
in
the
dead
air,
betrayed
where
they
were
placed.
The
fighting
was
so
near
now
that
often
the
wounded
came
in
without
stretchers;
they
crawled
back
from
the
front
by
themselves,
or
were
roughly
helped
by
a
less
seriously
hurt
companion.
Ann
did
not
know
what
time
it
was
“Well,
take
her,
then,
answered
ungraciously.
“Some
one
must
look
after
her!
Find
our
army—
Baltimore
pike.
She
can
go
through
to
the
rear.
Go
on,
Ann.
In
G—
d’s
name
don’t
stand
there!
Go
on!”
The
stranger
put
out
his
hand,
and
pulled
Ann
toward
him.
“Pardon,”
he
murmured
with
amazing
conventional-
“It
is
well
to
make
haste.”
He
ity.
when
the
devastating
news
came
that
General
Reynolds
had
been
killed,
but
after
that
she
worked
grimly
on,
with­
out
hope
of
a
victorious
issue
from
the
fighting.
Men
lay
for
hours
with
their
wounds
undressed,
their
lives
ebbing
away
slowly
with
the
seeping
blood
that
stained
their
blue
uniforms.
At
three
»♦
Ann
laughed,
said.
“If
there
is
going
to
be
a
battle
I
can
he
useful.”
Why
don’t
you
report
to
the
Medi­
cal
corps?
They
have
taken
over
the
seminary
building
for
a
hospital.
Into
Ann’s
mind
rushed
the
tales
she
had
heard
of
field
hospitals
and
the
atrocious
care
men
received
In
them—care
vastly
different
from
the
well-equipped
wards
in
which
she
had
worked.
♦*
she
said
to
her
tt
“I
am
going,
hostess.
“I
have
worked
for
a
year
and
a
half
in
hospitals
in
New
York.
The
woman
smiled
at
her
anxiously.
“Reckon
you
belong
there,
then,”
she
said
reluctantly,
“but
T
kind
of
hate
to
see
you
go
off
like
this.”
Her
dubious
glance
followed
Ann
down
the
street
and
gave
the
girl
a
warm
sense
of
being
looked
after.
She
thought
she
would
always
remember
this
kind
friend
bound
to
her
by
such
exciting
events.
It
was
not
until
she
had
crossed
the
town
that
it
struck
her
she
did
not
know
her
hostess*
o’clock
the
last
of
the
scraped
lint
was
used
and
an
hour
later
every
sheet
and
towel
in
the
place
had
been
torn
into
strips
to
staunch
wounds.
Across
the
yard
to
the
south
was
a
smaller
building,
and
Ann
decided
to
search
there
for
linen.
She
paused
for
a
mo­
ment
on
the
step;
the
yard
below
her
was
crowded
with
excited
violent
men,
and
off
to
the
right
she
could
see
that
the
regiments
holding
the
grove
of
trees
had
been
swept
back
to
the
ridge
just
in
front
of
the
seminary.
She
plunged
down
into
the
whirlpool
be­
low
her
and
was
flung
back
and
forth,
impotently.
There
was
much
inco­
herent
shouting,
and
suddenly,
while
she
looked,
a
band
of
men
in
blue
uni­
forms
swept
over
the
crest
of
the
hill,
almost
upon
her.
Close
on
their
heels*-
The
Union
men
pushed
his
arm
through
hers,
and
hur­
ried
her
back
down
the
street,
empty,
under
the
enemy’s
fire.
As
they
ran,
Hendricks
came
plunging
after
them.
“Ann!”
he
shouted.
“Ann,
who
are
that
mourning
for?
you
wearing
Uncle?”
“No,”
Ann
called
back.
“For
you!”
And
her
last
glimpse
of
him
showed
him
bursting
from
a
haze
of
bewilder­
ment
back
into
action.
«
Afterward
Ann
could
not
have
said
how
they
found
their
way
out
of
the
panic-stricken
town
of
Gettysburg.
She
had
only
confused
memories
of
being
pulled
out
of
the
road
while
groups
of
“We
Must
Find
Your
Sanitary
Com­
mission
Before
the
Night.”
were
men
in
gray,
were
in
a
panic
of
retreat.
They
bore
down
on
Ann
with
an
irresistible
force,
and
she
found
herself
carried
along
with
them
until
they
all
brought
up
against
the
seminary
fence
on
the
other
side
of
the
knoll.
There
they
soldiers
charged
past,
of
lurking
un­
der
protecting
porticos,
of
dodging
around
houses,
and
in
and
out
of
back
yards.
“Baltimore?”
her
escort
murmured
vaguely.
“It
is—
where?”
paused
for
a
moment,
breathing
hard,
and
Ann
demanded
spiritedly
to
be
al­
lowed
to
go
back
to
the
hospital.
A
clamor
of
opposition
arose
at
the
sug­
gestion,
and
a
young
lieutenant
ap­
peared
out
of
the
confusion.
“It
doesn’t
make
any
difference
where
we
go,”
Ann
urged
him;
“just
so
we
get
away
from
this
horrible
town.”
«
«
•
name.
Tliere
was
great
confusion
at
the
seminary,
which
was
being
trans­
formed
from
a
school
into
a
hospital
with
a
speed
in
which,
^it
seemed
to
Ann,
there
was
a
sort
of
panic.
She
found
the
doctor
rather
indifferent
to
y
her
proffered
assistance.
He
had,
he
said,
half
a
dozen
men
nurses,
whom
he
had
picked
up
in
Gettysburg.
She
set
humbly
to
work
bringing
cold
wa­
ter
to
the
patients,
and
fanning
them
as
they
lay
exhausted.
No
one
of
them
was
alarmingly
ill,
and
as
the
dark­
ness
settled
down
they
all
went
to
sleep.
There
was
nothing
for
Ann
to
do,
so
she
found
an
empty
room
in
the
seminary,
and
locked
herself
into
it.
The
seminary
yard
was
crowded
with
troops;
the
men
jay
about
on
the
grass
laughing
and
talking,
so
Ann
kept
her
curtains
drawn
until
she
blew
out
her
candle.
Her
window
faced
the
mountains,
and
when
she
threw
it
open
she
gasped
in
amazement.
The
night
was
velvet
black
and
the
stars
In
the
sky
were
hot
shining
dots;
Ann
could
follow
the
outline
of
the
moun­
tain
range
only
where
it
cut
arbitrar­
ily
against
them.
The
long
swelling
slope
was
invisible,
but
on
it
were
myriads
of
points
of
light,
bright
and
hot
like
the
stars,
only
nearer
and
more
flickering.
They
were
the
camp-
You
can’t
go
back,”
he
said
briefly.
The
enemy
will
have
this
hill
inside
half
an
hour.
You
must
come
along
with
us.”
It
was
in
vain
the
girl
pleaded
her
duties;
the
officer
was
firm
in
his
de­
cision
that
she
should
not
fall
into
the
hands
of
the
enemy.
Two
soldiers
lifted
her
over
the
crisscross
log
fence,
and,
once
on
the
other
side,
the
spirit
of
flight
took
possession
of
her,
too,
and
she
hurried
breathlessly
along
with
her
rescuers.
They
bore
on
to­
ward
the
town,
although
no
one
seemed
to
know
why.
Rumors
that
the
enemy
already
held
it
shook
the
retreating
troops.
They
were
able
to
ziake
an
entrance,
however,
and
The
farther
fields
were
strangely
empty
and
peaceful,
In
the.
golden
light.
Near
at
hand
small
bands
of
men
were
running
about;
it
was
hard
to
believe
them
anything
but
aimless.
Fugitives
passed
them
in
compact
groups,
or
strung
along
singly.
To
avoid
them
Ann
and
her
escort
bore
to
the
left,
and
came
upon
a
road
that
led
up
to
the
hilltops
beyond
the
town;
Union
artillery
<>was
moving
along
it,
and
the
two
fell
in
behind
one
of
the
six-mule
wagons.
Ann’s
protector
was
halted
twice,
but
he
produced
mysterious
papers
which
cleared
their
way
and
soon
they
were
free
of
the
actual
battle.
A
long
straight
road
stretched
before
them.
It
was
the
Baltimore
pike.
Ann
cried,
paused,
unwilling,
but
firm.
“You
must
go
back,”
she
“back
to
your
regiment!
I
shall
be
all
right”
She
managed
to
smile,
shak­
ily.
He
looked
at
her
with
singularly
intent
brown
eyes.
“I
have
no
regi­
ment.
.
.
.
I
am
not
even
Ameri­
can.
.
.
.
Come,
it
is
late,”
he
added
urgently.
“We
must
find
your
ganitary
commission
before
the
night.
It
should
come
up
this
road,
from
Washington.”
They
plunged
on.
mak­
ing
the
best
time
they
might,
over
ground
deeply
cut
by
the
heavy
ar­
tillery
wagons
and
congested
with
the
traffic
of
the
battle.
Officers
with
little
knots
of
aides
about
them
galloped
by,
in
a
frantic
hurry,
and
a
column
of
cavalry,
car­
bines
across
their
saddles,
came
near
riding
them
down.
The
men
were
flog­
ging
their
blown
horses
mercilessly,
and
they
called
out
questions
about
the
day’s
battle.
Ann’s
protector
pulled
her
into
the
roadside
hedge
to
allow
them
to
pass;
the
moment’s
rest
was
like
a
tonic
to
the
exhausted
girl.
After
that
the
two
fugitives
took
to
the
fields,
and
gradually,
as
they
walked
on,
the
firing
became
more
im­
personal.
It
was
very
bad
footing.
Ann’s
skirts
caught
continually
on
the
stubble,
and
after
a
few
minutes
of
this,
when
stooping
to
loosen
an
en­
tangled
fold,
she
was
conscious
of
feeling
alarmingly
dizzy.
In
the
fields
they
found
other
refugees
from
the
battle.
There
were
men
trying
to
find
a
short-cut
to
their
regiments,
men
looking
for
food,
for
water,
for
a
place
in
which
to
die.
Countless
numbers
of
wounded
had
wandered
away
from
the
fighting,
but
Ann
no
longer
took
in
their
sufferings,
and
once
she
drank
greedily
from
an
abandoned
canteen;
the
lukewarm
water
was
inexpressibly
precious.
.
.
.
She
was
only
half­
conscious
that
her
elbow
was
being
held
in
a
close
grasp,
but
now
and
then,
when
her
companion
spoke
to
her,
it
seemed
to
her
that
she
was
a
long
time
in
answering
him.
When
the
world
was
filled
with
a
red
sunset
glow
Ann’s
escort
caught
rein
of
a
wandering
horse
that
I
b
p
lered
against
them,
and
with
an
1
encouraging
word
to
the
girl,
swung
himself
into
the
big
cavalry
saddle.
When
he
repeated
what
he
had
said,
and
Ann
understood
that
he
wished
her
to
climb
up
behind
him
on
the
horse
that
loomed
so
high
above
her,
she
shook
her
head
childishly.
NOTICE
OF
ELECTION.
i
t
0
2
0
2
0
0202020
02020
t
v
NOTICE
IS
HEREBY
GIVEN,
that,
at
the
General
Election
to
be
held
in
this
State
on
the
Tuesday
succeeding
the
first
Monday
in
November,
(No­
vember
6
th)
the
following
officers
may
be
lawfully
voted
for,
to
wit:
A
Member
of
Assemly
in
the
place
of
Franklin
S.
Sampson.
A
Coroner
in
the
place
of
John
A.
Hatch.
All
whose
terms
of
office
will
expire
on
the
last
day
of
December,
next.
The
following
Town
Officers
may
al­
so
be
lawfully
voted
for,
to
wit:
Town
of
Barrington.
Supervisor
Town
Clerk
Justice
of
the
Peace
Justice
of
the
Peace
Assessor,
4
years
Assessor,
2
years
Collector
Overseer
of
the
Poor
5
Constables
Town
Superintendent
of
Highways
School
Director
Town
of
Benton,
Supervisor
Town
Clerk
Justice
of
the
Peace
Justice
of
the
Peace
Justice
of
the
Peace
to
fill
vacancy
Assessor,
4
years
Assessor,
2
years
Collector
Overseer
of
the
Poor
5
Constables
Town
Superintendent
of
Highways
School
Director
Town
of
Italy.
Supervisor
Town
Clerk
Justice
of
the
Peace,
4
years
Justice
of
the
Peace,
k
4
years
Justice
of
the
Peace
to
fill
vacancy
Assessor,
4
years
Assessor,
2
years
.
Collector
/
Overseer
of
the
Poor
5
Constables
Town
Superintendent
of
Highways
School
Director
Town
of
Jerusalem,
Supervisor
Town
Clerk
Justice
of
the
Peace,
4
years
Justice
of
the
Peace,
4
years
Justice
of
the
Peace
to
fill
vacancy
Assessor,
4
years*
Assessor,
2
years
Collector
Overseer
of
the
Poor
5
Constables
Town
Superintendent
of
Highways
School
Director
Town
of
Middlesex.
Supervisor
Town
Clerk
Justice
of
the
Peace,
4
years
Justice
of
the
Peace,
4
years
Assessor,
4
years
*
Assessor,
2
years
:
Collector
Overseer
of
the
Poor
5
Constables
Town
Superintendent
of
Highways
School
Director
Town
of
Milo.
Supervisor
Town
Clerk
Justice
of
the.
Peace
Justice
of
the
Peace
Assessor,
4
years
Assessor,
2
years
Collector
Overseer
of
the
Poor
5
Constables
Town
Superintendent
of
Highways
School
Director
Town
of
Potter.
Supervisor
For
Your
H
E
N
]
Bath
Room
This
is
the
time
to
get
a
set
of
Bathroom
Fixtures.
Nothing
starts
daj
so'
pleasently
as
bright
clean
1
tures
conveniently
placed.
have
a
complete
stock
fr
e
which
to
make
your
select!
On
on
/;
The
Geo.
W
.
Peck
Co.
LJ
D
D
□
D
D
D
n
D
a
D
D
D
D
n
D
Town
Clerk
Her
companion
reached
down,
and
lut
E
f
™
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
□
D
D
□
Q
shook
her
shoulders
sharply,
up
at
once,”
he
said.
«
Come
She
never
remembered
just
how
she
finally
managed
to
climb
up.
She
had
an
indistinct
recollection
of
some
con­
fused
argument
about
it,
but
it
all
merged
mistily
into
the
time
that
fol­
lowed,
when
she
sat
balanced
on
the
horse’s
wide
back,
her
arms
about
a
stranger’s
neck,
and
her
cheek
against
his
shoulder
chafed
by
his
rough
uni­
form.
.
.
.
She
gathered
that
they
were
lost,
but
it
did
not
seem
im­
portant.
.
.
.
With
the
angry
red
sunset,
the
firing
reluctantly
ceased.
Ann
had
fallen
asleep,
her
head
on
the
foreigner’s
shoulder,
and
he
had
turned
in
the
saddle
to
slip
one
arm
about
her
yielding
body,
when
the
horse
stumbled
heavily
over
some
trifling
obstacle
and
he
lurched
un­
steadily.
Ann
roused
herself
unwillingly.
“Where
are
we?**
The
stranger
shrugged,
In
the
dark­
ness.
“Who
knows?
The
question
is,
are
you
exhausted?”
Ann
did
not
answer,
but
it
was,
in­
dubitably,
the
question;
she
was
al­
most
at
the
end
of
her
strength.
A
little
farther
on
they
came
to
a
clearing
on
the
roadside,
where
the
darkness
was
less
enveloping.
The
horse
stopped,
wistfully,
and
stretch­
ing
out
his
nose,
he
neighed.
A
startlingly
quick
answer
came
from
the
gloom;
there
was
a
burst
of
rau­
cous
barking
and
the
sound
of
a
chain
resisting
the
rushes
of
a
dog.
“It
must
be
that
there
is
a
house.
Shall
we
see?”
Justice
of
the
Peace
Justice
of
the
Peace
to
fill
vacancy
Assessor,
4
years
Assessor,
2
years
Collector
Overseer
of
the
Poor
5
Constables
Town
Superintendent
of
Highways
School
Director
Town
of
Starkey.
Supervisor
Town
Clerk
Justice
of
the
Peace
Justice
of
the
Peace
Assessor,
4
years
Assessor,
2
years
Collector
Overseer
of
the
Poor
5
Constables
Town
Superintendent
of
Highways
School
Director
Town
of
Torrey.
Supervisor
Town
Clerk
Justice
of
the
Peace
Justice
of
the
Peace
Justice
of
the
Peace
Assessor,
4
years
Assessor,
2
years
Collector
Overseer
of
the
Poor
5
Constables
x
Town
Superintendent
of
Highways
School
Director
State
of
New
York,
Office
of
the
Commissioners
of
Election,
Yates
County,
ss.:
We
hereby
certify,
that,
we
have
compared
the
foregoing
with
the-origi­
nal
notices
filed
in
this
office,
and
that
the
same
is
a
correct
transcript
there­
from
and
of
the
whole
of
such
original.
WITNESS,
our
hands
and
official
seal,
at
Penn
Yan,
N.
Y.,
the
Eighth
day
of
October,
1
9
2
3
.
(Seal)
VINCENT
CULVER,
FRED
L.
ROGERS,
Commissioners
of
Elections,
Yates
County.
D
ID
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
□
a
a
□
D
s
s
D
□
□
u
Home
To
Be
Continued
♦
BATAVIA
PEN
NOTICE
Board
of
Supervisors,
Regular
Session
Notice
is
hereby
given
that
the
Bo
and
of
Supervisors
of
Yates
county
will
meet
in
regular
session
in
the
Supervisors’
room,
in
the
village
of
November
Penn
Yan,
on
Monday,
All
persons
having
claims
12,
1923.
against
said
county
are
hereby
noti­
fied
that
they
must
deposit
the
same,
FULLER
Merchandh
duly
itemized
and
verified
according
to
law,
with
the
Clerk
of
the
Board,
on
or
before
the
20th
day
of
Novem-
Require
1
ber,
1923.
All
county
officers
whose
duty
it
is
to
make
an
annual
report
to
said
Board
are
required
by
law
to^
do
so
on
or
before
November
5th.
Dated
Penn
Yan,
N.
Y.,
October
5
th,
1923.
wraps
are
now
quite
complete
and
sel{
CHARLES
H.
MALLORY,
ncj
wraps
made
of
the
finest
bnd
softe?
01w4
Clerk.,.—
shades
of
brown,
so
popular
oats
and
W
raps
fires
of
the
eremy,
and
as
she
looked
at
them
Ann
thrilled
with
a
sensation
Ann
found
the
commonplace,
homely
streets
inexpressibly
heartening.
Un­
expectedly,
at
an
angle
In
the
village
street,
they
came
upon
a
band
of
Union
men.
At
the
ring
of
the
officer’s
voice,
Ann
swung
around
;
above
the
men
towered
a
commanding
figure;
she
looked,
and
swept
her
fingers
over
her
eyes
and
looked
again.
Fear
dropped
away
before
her
incredulity.
♦
She
could
not
believe
her
eyes,
but
It
was
Hendricks,
there
was
no
doubt
about
it,
and
she
laughed
aloud
in
crazy
relief.
As
she
plunged
toward
him
she
could
hear
his
voice
braying
out
an
infuriated
command.
He
turned
as
she
came,
and
fell
back
in
lent.
It
seemed
to
1
#
Penn
Yan
tier
State
that
was
as
much
anticipation
as
fear.
The
next
morning
the
girl
was
awakened
by
picket
firing
down
the
pike.
She
sprang
up,
dazed,
and
for
a
moment
glared
about
her
wildly
at
her
strange
room.
There
were
no
more
volleys,
but
down
in
the
yard
beneath
her
window
there
was
a
great
turmoil.
Peering
out
she
saw
a
wagon
had
been
backed
up
to
the
main
door
and
that
two
or
three
men
were
being
taken
from
It
on
improvised
stretchers.
She
flung
on
her
clothes
and
ran
down
to
find
that
a
group
of
wounded
pickets,
the
first
casualties
of
the
fight
in
a
railroad
cut
not
far
from
the
sem­
inary,
lay
In
one
of
the
recently
cleared
lower
rooms.
There
were
no
cots
for
them,
and
it
was
a
fortunate
man
who
tiad
a
blanket
between
him
nmd
the
flpgr.
stupefied
amazer
her
a
long
moment
before
recognition
came
into
his
dumfounded
face.
Road
“Ann!”
he
gasped
at
length.
G—
d—Ann!”
M
Good
W
o
r
k
Will
Start
M
o
n
d
a
y
,
Oct
.
2
2
.
As
for
Ann,
foolish
tears
were
pour­
ing
down
her
cheeks,
and
she
could
only
nod,,
with
a
forced
and
trembling
smile.
W
e
Furnish
the
W
a
g
o
n
s
«
Hendricks
shifted
his
revolver
to
his
left
hand,
and
shook
her
violently
with
his
right.
“What
In
h—1
are
you
doing
here?”
he
demanded
urgently.
His
hand
on
her
arm
hurt,
and
Ann
gulped
down
her
tears,
and
pulled
back.
“Oh,
Hendricks,
you
aren’t
dead,
after
all!”
she
said
incoherently.
He
towered
above
her
in
furious
question.
“What
are
you
doing
here?”
he
repeated,
as
he
turned
to
shake
a
clenched
fist
In
tbs
direction
of
the
Enquire
J.
O’MEALIA
O
n
the
W
o
r
k
>
.
„
•
•
THIS
IS
THE
OVER.
I
RE
l
XI
V
I
l
—The
to
held
at
tl
church
next
the
Rev.
Ja
Bible
Schoo
p.
m.
the
ui
Sykes
preac
—At
the
day,
the
Re
preach
at
1
sonal
Resp<
sermonette
Bible
Schoo
Christian
E
Leader,
Wai
Is
Christiai
the
congrej
Methodists
—Chris
£
sen,
Lars
>
tensen
mote
day
to
atter
men’s
Leagi
—Mr.
am
son,
Perl,
last
week
—Mrs.
H
the
Misses
the
latter
i
Lewis’
brot
family,
ai
Lewis
wen
Sunday,
re
—Miss
V
ill
for
sev<
as
usual
tl
>
I
I
*
l
I
l
I
I
I
l
I
I
I
X
I
l
%
l
I
i
TAILO
RED
A
T
FASH
IO
N
PARK
Seeley
Says:
There
is
no
need
for
you
to
go
out
of
l
town
for
your
overcoat
this
fall
,
when
we
are
showing
such
a
wonderful
line
of
overcoats
at
20
per
cent
.
cheaper
than
any
city
store
can
show
you
.
Overcoats
$25
to
$85
and
everyone
a
good
one
at
the
price
.
mg
some
s
present
wi
—There
Monday
ai
teachers’
Yan.
and
another
hi
lumbus
D
e
—Hollis
to
take
a
lege
at
Ge
each
Satui
—The
F
tended
a
tors
of
t
Canandaig
—Dr.
ar
sons,
of
PI
ing
at
Mi
Mrs.
Chesl
—The
B
Rev.
and
represent
York
Bapi
held
in
Syracuse,
—Miss
'
ing
at
AI
spent
the
Mr.
and
I
—Mr.
a
receiving
of
a
son
—“Rail}
last
Sun
music
wa
evening
s
service
t
James
Sy
who
delh
mon
on
“!
:,was
liste
profit
by
—The
(
of
the
Ba
cial
in
tt
evening,
vites
all
Ic
will
b<
and
light
ed.
—Mr.
a
entertaini
daughter,
Danvers,
—The
Payne
ar<
If
out
again
illness.
i
—
Mrs.
]
been
spe
her
sons
!l
her
home
I
D
0
I
k
I
I
Buy
your
overcoat
at
SEELEY
MAIN
S
T
.
PENN
YAN
IB
hml
W
o
__
.
-
♦
—
M
l
,
>
VA
l
C
I
I
—Mr.
I
ill
for
a
(Masonic
1
last
week
—Then
Presbyter
—Rev.
Adams
o:
weeks.
—Mr.
a
ton,
are
—Mrs,
ton,
retu
the
Presb
eva
Iasi
Thursday
called
on
—Born
of
Roche
son,
Hem
—Mrs.
and
Sun<3
—Anyo
Mr.
Orv
weeks,
ic
—The
vember
S
—The
with
Mis
afternoon
portant
]
should
ei
—The
.
Presbytei
vember
5
will
be
g
—Born
Barden
h
V
.
K<
W
h
e
n
S
im
o
n
id
e
s
T
o
o
k
P
e
n
in
H
a
n
d
T
HE
famed
Greek
poet
attended
a
banquet
at
which
he
was
served
wine
of
temperature
unpleasing.
Moved
thereby,
he
enscribed
that
“no
one
will
commend
the
man
who
gives
hot
water
to
a
friend.”
History
fails
to
reveal
the
name
of
his
hostess.
Imagine
the
glee
with
which
Simonides
would
have
greeted
cubes
of
sparkling
i
c
e
!
Or
think
of
the
limp
salads,
the
unrefreshing
drinks,
which
would
be
our
por­
tion
today
if
ice
was
still
uncommon.
i.
—The
entertain
dining
rc
tober
9.
songs—
ol
and
colie
gram
fo
by
Miss
]
Canavan,
ment
o
by
one'
The
st
>
Spanish,
colors,
si
The
first
lege
mov
was
entt
tarians,
175
were
Just
an
incident—but
serving
well,
we
think,
to
bring
hofiae
again
the
moral
that
ice
is
a
luxury-commodity
of
first
order—a
n
e
c
e
s
s
i
t
y
in
weU
served
meals—a
n
e
c
e
s
s
i
t
y
the
whole
year
’round
for
the
proper
protection
of
foods.
K
E
U
K
A
L
A
K
E
IC
E
C
O
.,
PENN
YAN,
N.
Y.
MEMBER
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION
OF
ICE
INDUSTRIES
163
W
e
s
t
W
a
sh
in
g
ton
Street
,
C
h
icago
,
Illin
o
is
—The
vice
was
ber
9
in
regular
men
wei
President
third
Fr«
lege
for
\
the
ever
new
stud
esting
in
in
the
cc
This
Emblem
Your
V
e
p
e
n
l
o
n
Protection
ICE
mg.
—Miss
York
C
the
Nortl
tion,
spe
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l •• . ' 1 > \ *• \ f ir J - I !: Is < . I ------- - - L_ . 1 1 i - . - . . . v — . . . 4 A — ■ - _ . .* • * • . , t - . . t-. . . I > —. . i * . - u . i •* — Page Six PENN YAN THURSDAY, O C T O B E R 18, 1923 ' 1 1 ........................................... ..... ■■ ■ « Cortlandts Washington | Square \At nine o’clock a report reached the hospital that General Reynolds had arrived in Gettysburg in advance of the first corps, and that he had mount­ ed a fresh horse and galloped out past the seminary to the front. Some sol­ diers reported they had seen him, sur­ rounded by a half-dozen aides. The hospital corps felt the stimulus of this good news at once; even Ann was cer­ tain that the horrid tide of wounded invisible enemy. “What in G-—d’s name are you here for?” ■* “You are not dead!” Ann repeated stupidly, and added, with a flash of joyous self-revelation, “I'm glad!” Self-respect came back to her, and clothed her gloriously. “You can’t stay here,” Hendricks was shouting. He whirled her back .% would ebb with the arrival of the pop­ ular Union leader. She was engaged In cutting the uniforms from horribly mangled men; the regular nurses were unable to cope with the wound­ ed, and she was welcome to do what she could. lender a portico. “It’s no place for a young lady— can’t you see that? Why didn’t you stay in New York? Why don’t you stay with the Sanitary commission? Why do you have to fol­ low me?” / “I’m all right,” Ann protested un­ convincingly, “now that I’ve seen you.” «< Janet A. Fairbank 8 Copyright by Ths Bobtw-MerrW Go. All around the seminary the battle raged, but Ann had no time to won- CHAPTER XII Gettysburg. Ann found shelter in a little house on Chambersburg street: she felt sure that it must be respectable because it stood next door to a righteous-appear­ ing Lutheran church, and she liked the look of the place besides. She liked its hostess also. She had found her trimming geraniums with an extraor­ dinary placidity, In view of the fact that there were said to be enemy sol­ diers in Gettysburg. She took Ann into her stuffy little house and brought her cold water from the pump in the back yard. When the girl had washed away the dust of her journey, the two settled down in the stifling parlor to talk, and to watch from behind the Nottingham curtains for a glimpse pf Confederate soldiers. The little town remained ominously silent. A little boy came running down the street shouting, and as he came near they could hear that he was calling: “The Johnnies are coming!” Ann ran out into the front yard to question him. “There’s > » a whole brigade with wagons; they’re after clothing and shoes. That’s all I know! Lemme go on!” Suddenly into the stillness of the house broke clamorous sounds— shouts and the thunder of horses’ feet. “That’s from the Emmitsburg pike, it must be our men! -‘It’s Buford’s cavalry—It must be!” They opened the door and the noise came louder. It was infinitely reassur­ ing. As they watched, the end of the street was filled with a great cloud of dust, and suddenly a front rank of cavalry broke through it, and bulked huge and black against it. In five minutes they were gone; in half an hour they came loafing back, gay with triumph. “We drove ’em out all right!” a blond Swede from Illinois told Ann, as he stopped to drink the water she of­ fered him. “Where are you going now?” “We are ordered to camp on the ridge by the seminary on the other side of town, but we are placing vedettes on all the roads. They say General Reynolds has been ordered to occupy the town: looks as if this is the place all right. It’s a pity you ladies aren’t safe away.” “I can nurse,” she All right?” he echoed. He took off his cap and flung it violently on the ground. “You've got to get away! You’ve got to make the Baltimore pike, whfere our people are coming up. I can’t go with you! I can’t leave here!” Ann looked at him attentive­ ly; his face had hardened into sterner lines, and his mouth was firm set. She was extraordinarily proud of him; looking at him, she was animated by a sensation of the sweetest affection— ’the most soft sisterliness. Some one came up to them in the momentary isolation of their inter­ view, and Ann turned to see a slim young man, whose trim figure, in the midst of the battle grime, gave her a swift impression of elegance. He saluted Hendricks, and said, “Is there anything I can do? Your wife— it would give me pleasure to conduct her to the rear.” His English was tinged with a faint alien accent, Ana thought. Hendricks tt All Around the Seminary the Battle Raged. der where the victory lay. She was not certain which army had possession of the town, but she knew that the ground' in the front and about the seminary building was held by Union troops. There was great activity among them, and off to the right a constant deafening sound of artillery. The nearer guns had been placed in a grove; only the smoke from them oozing through the tree-tops, white and thin in the dead air, betrayed where they were placed. The fighting was so near now that often the wounded came in without stretchers; they crawled back from the front by themselves, or were roughly helped by a less seriously hurt companion. Ann did not know what time it was “Well, take her, then, answered ungraciously. “Some one must look after her! Find our army— Baltimore pike. She can go through to the rear. Go on, Ann. In G— d’s name don’t stand there! Go on!” The stranger put out his hand, and pulled Ann toward him. “Pardon,” he murmured with amazing conventional- “It is well to make haste.” He ity. when the devastating news came that General Reynolds had been killed, but after that she worked grimly on, with­ out hope of a victorious issue from the fighting. Men lay for hours with their wounds undressed, their lives ebbing away slowly with the seeping blood that stained their blue uniforms. At three »♦ Ann laughed, said. “If there is going to be a battle I can he useful.” Why don’t you report to the Medi­ cal corps? They have taken over the seminary building for a hospital. Into Ann’s mind rushed the tales she had heard of field hospitals and the atrocious care men received In them—care vastly different from the well-equipped wards in which she had worked. ♦* she said to her tt “I am going, hostess. “I have worked for a year and a half in hospitals in New York. The woman smiled at her anxiously. “Reckon you belong there, then,” she said reluctantly, “but T kind of hate to see you go off like this.” Her dubious glance followed Ann down the street and gave the girl a warm sense of being looked after. She thought she would always remember this kind friend bound to her by such exciting events. It was not until she had crossed the town that it struck her she did not know her hostess* o’clock the last of the scraped lint was used and an hour later every sheet and towel in the place had been torn into strips to staunch wounds. Across the yard to the south was a smaller building, and Ann decided to search there for linen. She paused for a mo­ ment on the step; the yard below her was crowded with excited violent men, and off to the right she could see that the regiments holding the grove of trees had been swept back to the ridge just in front of the seminary. She plunged down into the whirlpool be­ low her and was flung back and forth, impotently. There was much inco­ herent shouting, and suddenly, while she looked, a band of men in blue uni­ forms swept over the crest of the hill, almost upon her. Close on their heels*- The Union men pushed his arm through hers, and hur­ ried her back down the street, empty, under the enemy’s fire. As they ran, Hendricks came plunging after them. “Ann!” he shouted. “Ann, who are that mourning for? you wearing Uncle?” “No,” Ann called back. “For you!” And her last glimpse of him showed him bursting from a haze of bewilder­ ment back into action. « Afterward Ann could not have said how they found their way out of the panic-stricken town of Gettysburg. She had only confused memories of being pulled out of the road while groups of “We Must Find Your Sanitary Com­ mission Before the Night.” were men in gray, were in a panic of retreat. They bore down on Ann with an irresistible force, and she found herself carried along with them until they all brought up against the seminary fence on the other side of the knoll. There they soldiers charged past, of lurking un­ der protecting porticos, of dodging around houses, and in and out of back yards. “Baltimore?” her escort murmured vaguely. “It is— where?” paused for a moment, breathing hard, and Ann demanded spiritedly to be al­ lowed to go back to the hospital. A clamor of opposition arose at the sug­ gestion, and a young lieutenant ap­ peared out of the confusion. “It doesn’t make any difference where we go,” Ann urged him; “just so we get away from this horrible town.” « « • name. Tliere was great confusion at the seminary, which was being trans­ formed from a school into a hospital with a speed in which, ^it seemed to Ann, there was a sort of panic. She found the doctor rather indifferent to y her proffered assistance. He had, he said, half a dozen men nurses, whom he had picked up in Gettysburg. She set humbly to work bringing cold wa­ ter to the patients, and fanning them as they lay exhausted. No one of them was alarmingly ill, and as the dark­ ness settled down they all went to sleep. There was nothing for Ann to do, so she found an empty room in the seminary, and locked herself into it. The seminary yard was crowded with troops; the men jay about on the grass laughing and talking, so Ann kept her curtains drawn until she blew out her candle. Her window faced the mountains, and when she threw it open she gasped in amazement. The night was velvet black and the stars In the sky were hot shining dots; Ann could follow the outline of the moun­ tain range only where it cut arbitrar­ ily against them. The long swelling slope was invisible, but on it were myriads of points of light, bright and hot like the stars, only nearer and more flickering. They were the camp- You can’t go back,” he said briefly. The enemy will have this hill inside half an hour. You must come along with us.” It was in vain the girl pleaded her duties; the officer was firm in his de­ cision that she should not fall into the hands of the enemy. Two soldiers lifted her over the crisscross log fence, and, once on the other side, the spirit of flight took possession of her, too, and she hurried breathlessly along with her rescuers. They bore on to­ ward the town, although no one seemed to know why. Rumors that the enemy already held it shook the retreating troops. They were able to ziake an entrance, however, and The farther fields were strangely empty and peaceful, In the. golden light. Near at hand small bands of men were running about; it was hard to believe them anything but aimless. Fugitives passed them in compact groups, or strung along singly. To avoid them Ann and her escort bore to the left, and came upon a road that led up to the hilltops beyond the town; Union artillery <>was moving along it, and the two fell in behind one of the six-mule wagons. Ann’s protector was halted twice, but he produced mysterious papers which cleared their way and soon they were free of the actual battle. A long straight road stretched before them. It was the Baltimore pike. Ann cried, paused, unwilling, but firm. “You must go back,” she “back to your regiment! I shall be all right” She managed to smile, shak­ ily. He looked at her with singularly intent brown eyes. “I have no regi­ ment. . . . I am not even Ameri­ can. . . . Come, it is late,” he added urgently. “We must find your ganitary commission before the night. It should come up this road, from Washington.” They plunged on. mak­ ing the best time they might, over ground deeply cut by the heavy ar­ tillery wagons and congested with the traffic of the battle. Officers with little knots of aides about them galloped by, in a frantic hurry, and a column of cavalry, car­ bines across their saddles, came near riding them down. The men were flog­ ging their blown horses mercilessly, and they called out questions about the day’s battle. Ann’s protector pulled her into the roadside hedge to allow them to pass; the moment’s rest was like a tonic to the exhausted girl. After that the two fugitives took to the fields, and gradually, as they walked on, the firing became more im­ personal. It was very bad footing. Ann’s skirts caught continually on the stubble, and after a few minutes of this, when stooping to loosen an en­ tangled fold, she was conscious of feeling alarmingly dizzy. In the fields they found other refugees from the battle. There were men trying to find a short-cut to their regiments, men looking for food, for water, for a place in which to die. Countless numbers of wounded had wandered away from the fighting, but Ann no longer took in their sufferings, and once she drank greedily from an abandoned canteen; the lukewarm water was inexpressibly precious. . . . She was only half­ conscious that her elbow was being held in a close grasp, but now and then, when her companion spoke to her, it seemed to her that she was a long time in answering him. When the world was filled with a red sunset glow Ann’s escort caught rein of a wandering horse that I b p lered against them, and with an 1 encouraging word to the girl, swung himself into the big cavalry saddle. When he repeated what he had said, and Ann understood that he wished her to climb up behind him on the horse that loomed so high above her, she shook her head childishly. NOTICE OF ELECTION. i t 0 2 0 2 0 0202020 02020 t v NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that, at the General Election to be held in this State on the Tuesday succeeding the first Monday in November, (No­ vember 6 th) the following officers may be lawfully voted for, to wit: A Member of Assemly in the place of Franklin S. Sampson. A Coroner in the place of John A. Hatch. All whose terms of office will expire on the last day of December, next. The following Town Officers may al­ so be lawfully voted for, to wit: Town of Barrington. Supervisor Town Clerk Justice of the Peace Justice of the Peace Assessor, 4 years Assessor, 2 years Collector Overseer of the Poor 5 Constables Town Superintendent of Highways School Director Town of Benton, Supervisor Town Clerk Justice of the Peace Justice of the Peace Justice of the Peace to fill vacancy Assessor, 4 years Assessor, 2 years Collector Overseer of the Poor 5 Constables Town Superintendent of Highways School Director Town of Italy. Supervisor Town Clerk Justice of the Peace, 4 years Justice of the Peace, k 4 years Justice of the Peace to fill vacancy Assessor, 4 years Assessor, 2 years . Collector / Overseer of the Poor 5 Constables Town Superintendent of Highways School Director Town of Jerusalem, Supervisor Town Clerk Justice of the Peace, 4 years Justice of the Peace, 4 years Justice of the Peace to fill vacancy Assessor, 4 years* Assessor, 2 years Collector Overseer of the Poor 5 Constables Town Superintendent of Highways School Director Town of Middlesex. Supervisor Town Clerk Justice of the Peace, 4 years Justice of the Peace, 4 years Assessor, 4 years * Assessor, 2 years : Collector Overseer of the Poor 5 Constables Town Superintendent of Highways School Director Town of Milo. Supervisor Town Clerk Justice of the. Peace Justice of the Peace Assessor, 4 years Assessor, 2 years Collector Overseer of the Poor 5 Constables Town Superintendent of Highways School Director Town of Potter. Supervisor For Your H E N ] Bath Room This is the time to get a set of Bathroom Fixtures. Nothing starts daj so' pleasently as bright clean 1 tures conveniently placed. have a complete stock fr e which to make your select! On on /; The Geo. W . Peck Co. LJ D D □ D D D n D a D D D D n D Town Clerk Her companion reached down, and lut E f ™ D D D D D D D D D □ D D □ Q shook her shoulders sharply, up at once,” he said. « Come She never remembered just how she finally managed to climb up. She had an indistinct recollection of some con­ fused argument about it, but it all merged mistily into the time that fol­ lowed, when she sat balanced on the horse’s wide back, her arms about a stranger’s neck, and her cheek against his shoulder chafed by his rough uni­ form. . . . She gathered that they were lost, but it did not seem im­ portant. . . . With the angry red sunset, the firing reluctantly ceased. Ann had fallen asleep, her head on the foreigner’s shoulder, and he had turned in the saddle to slip one arm about her yielding body, when the horse stumbled heavily over some trifling obstacle and he lurched un­ steadily. Ann roused herself unwillingly. “Where are we?** The stranger shrugged, In the dark­ ness. “Who knows? The question is, are you exhausted?” Ann did not answer, but it was, in­ dubitably, the question; she was al­ most at the end of her strength. A little farther on they came to a clearing on the roadside, where the darkness was less enveloping. The horse stopped, wistfully, and stretch­ ing out his nose, he neighed. A startlingly quick answer came from the gloom; there was a burst of rau­ cous barking and the sound of a chain resisting the rushes of a dog. “It must be that there is a house. Shall we see?” Justice of the Peace Justice of the Peace to fill vacancy Assessor, 4 years Assessor, 2 years Collector Overseer of the Poor 5 Constables Town Superintendent of Highways School Director Town of Starkey. Supervisor Town Clerk Justice of the Peace Justice of the Peace Assessor, 4 years Assessor, 2 years Collector Overseer of the Poor 5 Constables Town Superintendent of Highways School Director Town of Torrey. Supervisor Town Clerk Justice of the Peace Justice of the Peace Justice of the Peace Assessor, 4 years Assessor, 2 years Collector Overseer of the Poor 5 Constables x Town Superintendent of Highways School Director State of New York, Office of the Commissioners of Election, Yates County, ss.: We hereby certify, that, we have compared the foregoing with the-origi­ nal notices filed in this office, and that the same is a correct transcript there­ from and of the whole of such original. WITNESS, our hands and official seal, at Penn Yan, N. Y., the Eighth day of October, 1 9 2 3 . (Seal) VINCENT CULVER, FRED L. ROGERS, Commissioners of Elections, Yates County. D ID D D D D D D D D □ a a □ D s s D □ □ u Home To Be Continued ♦ BATAVIA PEN NOTICE Board of Supervisors, Regular Session Notice is hereby given that the Bo and of Supervisors of Yates county will meet in regular session in the Supervisors’ room, in the village of November Penn Yan, on Monday, All persons having claims 12, 1923. against said county are hereby noti­ fied that they must deposit the same, FULLER Merchandh duly itemized and verified according to law, with the Clerk of the Board, on or before the 20th day of Novem- Require 1 ber, 1923. All county officers whose duty it is to make an annual report to said Board are required by law to^ do so on or before November 5th. Dated Penn Yan, N. Y., October 5 th, 1923. wraps are now quite complete and sel{ CHARLES H. MALLORY, ncj wraps made of the finest bnd softe? 01w4 Clerk.,.— shades of brown, so popular oats and W raps fires of the eremy, and as she looked at them Ann thrilled with a sensation Ann found the commonplace, homely streets inexpressibly heartening. Un­ expectedly, at an angle In the village street, they came upon a band of Union men. At the ring of the officer’s voice, Ann swung around ; above the men towered a commanding figure; she looked, and swept her fingers over her eyes and looked again. Fear dropped away before her incredulity. ♦ She could not believe her eyes, but It was Hendricks, there was no doubt about it, and she laughed aloud in crazy relief. As she plunged toward him she could hear his voice braying out an infuriated command. He turned as she came, and fell back in lent. It seemed to 1 # Penn Yan tier State that was as much anticipation as fear. The next morning the girl was awakened by picket firing down the pike. She sprang up, dazed, and for a moment glared about her wildly at her strange room. There were no more volleys, but down in the yard beneath her window there was a great turmoil. Peering out she saw a wagon had been backed up to the main door and that two or three men were being taken from It on improvised stretchers. She flung on her clothes and ran down to find that a group of wounded pickets, the first casualties of the fight in a railroad cut not far from the sem­ inary, lay In one of the recently cleared lower rooms. There were no cots for them, and it was a fortunate man who tiad a blanket between him nmd the flpgr. stupefied amazer her a long moment before recognition came into his dumfounded face. Road “Ann!” he gasped at length. G— d—Ann!” M Good W o r k Will Start M o n d a y , Oct . 2 2 . As for Ann, foolish tears were pour­ ing down her cheeks, and she could only nod,, with a forced and trembling smile. W e Furnish the W a g o n s « Hendricks shifted his revolver to his left hand, and shook her violently with his right. “What In h—1 are you doing here?” he demanded urgently. His hand on her arm hurt, and Ann gulped down her tears, and pulled back. “Oh, Hendricks, you aren’t dead, after all!” she said incoherently. He towered above her in furious question. “What are you doing here?” he repeated, as he turned to shake a clenched fist In tbs direction of the Enquire J. O’MEALIA O n the W o r k > . „ • • THIS IS THE OVER. I RE l XI V I l —The to held at tl church next the Rev. Ja Bible Schoo p. m. the ui Sykes preac —At the day, the Re preach at 1 sonal Resp< sermonette Bible Schoo Christian E Leader, Wai Is Christiai the congrej Methodists —Chris £ sen, Lars > tensen mote day to atter men’s Leagi —Mr. am son, Perl, last week —Mrs. H the Misses the latter i Lewis’ brot family, ai Lewis wen Sunday, re —Miss V ill for sev< as usual tl > I I * l I l I I I l I I I X I l % l I i TAILO RED A T FASH IO N PARK Seeley Says: There is no need for you to go out of l town for your overcoat this fall , when we are showing such a wonderful line of overcoats at 20 per cent . cheaper than any city store can show you . Overcoats $25 to $85 and everyone a good one at the price . mg some s present wi —There Monday ai teachers’ Yan. and another hi lumbus D e —Hollis to take a lege at Ge each Satui —The F tended a tors of t Canandaig —Dr. ar sons, of PI ing at Mi Mrs. Chesl —The B Rev. and represent York Bapi held in Syracuse, —Miss ' ing at AI spent the Mr. and I —Mr. a receiving of a son —“Rail} last Sun music wa evening s service t James Sy who delh mon on “! :,was liste profit by —The ( of the Ba cial in tt evening, vites all Ic will b< and light ed. —Mr. a entertaini daughter, Danvers, —The Payne ar< If out again illness. i — Mrs. ] been spe her sons !l her home I D 0 I k I I Buy your overcoat at SEELEY MAIN S T . PENN YAN IB hml W o __ . - ♦ — M l , > VA l C I I —Mr. I ill for a (Masonic 1 last week —Then Presbyter —Rev. Adams o: weeks. —Mr. a ton, are —Mrs, ton, retu the Presb eva Iasi Thursday called on —Born of Roche son, Hem —Mrs. and Sun<3 —Anyo Mr. Orv weeks, ic —The vember S —The with Mis afternoon portant ] should ei —The . Presbytei vember 5 will be g —Born Barden h V . K< W h e n S im o n id e s T o o k P e n in H a n d T HE famed Greek poet attended a banquet at which he was served wine of temperature unpleasing. Moved thereby, he enscribed that “no one will commend the man who gives hot water to a friend.” History fails to reveal the name of his hostess. Imagine the glee with which Simonides would have greeted cubes of sparkling i c e ! Or think of the limp salads, the unrefreshing drinks, which would be our por­ tion today if ice was still uncommon. i. —The entertain dining rc tober 9. songs— ol and colie gram fo by Miss ] Canavan, ment o by one' The st > Spanish, colors, si The first lege mov was entt tarians, 175 were Just an incident—but serving well, we think, to bring hofiae again the moral that ice is a luxury-commodity of first order—a n e c e s s i t y in weU served meals—a n e c e s s i t y the whole year ’round for the proper protection of foods. K E U K A L A K E IC E C O ., PENN YAN, N. Y. MEMBER NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF ICE INDUSTRIES 163 W e s t W a sh in g ton Street , C h icago , Illin o is —The vice was ber 9 in regular men wei President third Fr« lege for \ the ever new stud esting in in the cc This Emblem Your V e p e n l o n Protection ICE mg. —Miss York C the Nortl tion, spe during tl students day she TV? j ■